Understanding Enthalpy and Entropy: Key Factors in Chemical Reactions

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The enthalpy change for a specific compound varies with temperature and pressure due to the influence of bond energies and the proportions of products formed during a reaction. While enthalpy changes are constant for a given reaction, free energy changes fluctuate with temperature and pressure, affecting the spontaneity of reactions. At higher temperatures, the significance of the TdS term increases, impacting the overall enthalpy and free energy calculations. To determine if a reaction can occur naturally, one must consider free energy changes rather than relying solely on entropy values.
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I've got two questions here.
Why is the enthalpy cahnge for a specific compound differs when temperature, pressure is different?
Can we use the entropy change to deduse whether an reaction can happen naturally?
Thank u
 
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The enthalpy change pertains to the level of the chemical equation and thus it is constant as long as the reaction takes place; since enthalpy changes pertains to bond energies. What you are referring to, I believe is, free energy changes. Free energy changes differ at different temperatures and pressures, which can be due to several reasons. For one, the rate of the unfavorable reaction will be increased relative to the favorable reaction at higher temperatures, thus the enthalpy of the reaction as a whole will be different at different temperatures since different proportions, relating to the chemical equation, of products will be formed (think enthalpy change per mole). Also at higher temperatures the value of TdS becomes significant. In order to calculate the spontaneity of a reaction one needs to know this free energy change, entropy value will not be sufficient.


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That is great, thank u again. :smile:
 
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